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Sydney police free 'sex slaves' | Sydney police free 'sex slaves' |
(20 minutes later) | |
Australian police say they have broken up an international sex-trafficking ring after rescuing 10 South Korean women from Sydney brothels. | |
Five people have been arrested and charged with offences including people trafficking and debt bondage. | Five people have been arrested and charged with offences including people trafficking and debt bondage. |
Police said the women were lured to Australia and forced to work up to 20 hours a day in legal Sydney brothels. | Police said the women were lured to Australia and forced to work up to 20 hours a day in legal Sydney brothels. |
They had agreed to work in the sex industry, but were deceived about conditions, police said. | They had agreed to work in the sex industry, but were deceived about conditions, police said. |
"My understanding is that they came to Australia to work in the sex industry, but under more reasonable conditions," Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Tim Morris said. | |
'Vanloads of men' | |
Once the women were in Australia, the syndicate took their passports, officials said. | |
"This is probably the largest alleged syndicate that we have smashed," Immigration Department Assistant Secretary Lyn O'Connell said. | |
The five people arrested include a South Korean woman and a Korean-Australian woman, who police allege is the head of a syndicate that was making $2.8m (£1.4m) annually. | |
Government prosecutors said the evidence against the five includes six months of intercepted phone calls and Korean-language business documents, Reuters news agency reported. | |
Prostitution is legal in most of Australia but new slavery laws were introduced in 1999 to prevent vulnerable women being exploited. | |
A business owner near one of the brothels said it was staffed by Chinese, Japanese and Korean women and was always busy, says the BBC's Phil Mercer in Sydney. | |
At the weekends, vanloads of Asian men would descend on the premises, he says. |